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Post by -- on Mar 5, 2016 22:07:27 GMT
SO. I wanted to see how you guys sample cause i never actually sampled before. I also wanted to see what yalls favorite sampled track are or whatever. I have two tracks i wanna use a sample on (https://soundcloud.com/raoulame/sets/golden-woman-project/s-yWzGj) but like idk what to use. I have a playlist on youtube (https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL10D0NGZ7UZ0o_2eMxfo9_zD2efhBk3BS) full of songs that were sampled and just old songs i found. So what are your favorite samples/sampled tracks?
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Mar 5, 2016 22:51:13 GMT
I was going to make a long ass post about how my favorite songs all take a sample from something, but it was going to be REALLY big, so I won't. But there exists an awesome site called WhoSampled where you can find samples for about any song ever.
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Sampling
Mar 5, 2016 23:08:46 GMT
via mobile
Post by -- on Mar 5, 2016 23:08:46 GMT
I was going to make a long ass post about how my favorite songs all take a sample from something, but it was going to be REALLY big, so I won't. But there exists an awesome site called WhoSampled where you can find samples for about any song ever. Lmfaoo that's how I made my playlist on YouTube. I just wanted to see what you guys liked as far as sampling and sampling styles
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Mar 5, 2016 23:13:34 GMT
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Mar 5, 2016 23:17:30 GMT
I was going to make a long ass post about how my favorite songs all take a sample from something, but it was going to be REALLY big, so I won't. But there exists an awesome site called WhoSampled where you can find samples for about any song ever. Lmfaoo that's how I made my playlist on YouTube. I just wanted to see what you guys liked as far as sampling and sampling styles This kind of question is like a Gemini's worst nightmare.
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child
New Member
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Post by child on Mar 6, 2016 0:35:21 GMT
A lot of the people who are into this kind of music call it "Hard pop" or "Metal pop" cause of course it keeps the pop'ness, but it delivers a hard beat. Or well that's what a lot of my friends call it. They call anything popish with a heavy bass "Metal pop" for example, TROPHY by Charli XCX is considered "metal pop" and "Hard Pop". Sophie is so good at it. But of course it's also known as "Bubblegum bass"
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Mar 6, 2016 15:48:08 GMT
A lot of the people who are into this kind of music call it "Hard pop" or "Metal pop" cause of course it keeps the pop'ness, but it delivers a hard beat. Or well that's what a lot of my friends call it. They call anything popish with a heavy bass "Metal pop" for example, TROPHY by Charli XCX is considered "metal pop" and "Hard Pop". Sophie is so good at it. But of course it's also known as "Bubblegum bass"
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Post by dertinoises on Mar 6, 2016 20:45:39 GMT
what software are you using to make music? it probably has an internal sampler and then just youtube tutorial the shit out of it also this guy is my personal sampling hero soundcloud.com/esbe1988/darling
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Sampling
Mar 6, 2016 22:05:55 GMT
via mobile
Post by -- on Mar 6, 2016 22:05:55 GMT
what software are you using to make music? it probably has an internal sampler and then just youtube tutorial the shit out of it also this guy is my personal sampling hero soundcloud.com/esbe1988/darlingRight now I just have FL Studio 10.
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Post by -- on Mar 7, 2016 6:16:34 GMT
A lot of the people who are into this kind of music call it "Hard pop" or "Metal pop" cause of course it keeps the pop'ness, but it delivers a hard beat. Or well that's what a lot of my friends call it. They call anything popish with a heavy bass "Metal pop" for example, TROPHY by Charli XCX is considered "metal pop" and "Hard Pop". Sophie is so good at it. But of course it's also known as "Bubblegum bass" soundcloud.com/rasuul/at-the-crib-with-another-ladythis would be like hard pop or metal pop right?
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child
New Member
Posts: 30
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Sampling
Mar 7, 2016 9:18:49 GMT
via mobile
-- likes this
Post by child on Mar 7, 2016 9:18:49 GMT
A lot of the people who are into this kind of music call it "Hard pop" or "Metal pop" cause of course it keeps the pop'ness, but it delivers a hard beat. Or well that's what a lot of my friends call it. They call anything popish with a heavy bass "Metal pop" for example, TROPHY by Charli XCX is considered "metal pop" and "Hard Pop". Sophie is so good at it. But of course it's also known as "Bubblegum bass" soundcloud.com/rasuul/at-the-crib-with-another-ladythis would be like hard pop or metal pop right? OOO BOY YASSSS
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pixel
Junior Member
Posts: 94
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Post by pixel on Mar 8, 2016 0:26:11 GMT
SO. I wanted to see how you guys sample cause i never actually sampled before. I also wanted to see what yalls favorite sampled track are or whatever. I have two tracks i wanna use a sample on (https://soundcloud.com/raoulame/sets/golden-woman-project/s-yWzGj) but like idk what to use. I have a playlist on youtube (https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL10D0NGZ7UZ0o_2eMxfo9_zD2efhBk3BS) full of songs that were sampled and just old songs i found. So what are your favorite samples/sampled tracks? If you don't know who Moby is, he's my number one inspiration for sampling. He combines jaunty pianos with gospel and old rock sampling, and he's one of the best at it. Even if this isn't your favorite, genre, I highly recommend listening to his discography. Regardless of preference, he has probably one of the best ears in the industry for this stuff. Aside from vocals, keep your ears out for distinct hits and stabs. One of my favorite uses of this is the iconic horn sample from the Beastie Boys' "Brass Monkey" in Death Grips' "Lord of the Game" Samples should be short and should typically not exceed five to ten seconds (excluding looping). It keeps the music fresh and yours. Basically anything you think sounds cool. My all-time favorite example of a random-ass sample being thrown in literally all over an album is Lana del Rey sampling Rick James. (Sample appears at 9:20) (Sample is pretty much throughout the entire album) Good luck!
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Sampling
Mar 8, 2016 2:31:43 GMT
via mobile
Post by Dvnots on Mar 8, 2016 2:31:43 GMT
SO. I wanted to see how you guys sample cause i never actually sampled before. I also wanted to see what yalls favorite sampled track are or whatever. I have two tracks i wanna use a sample on (https://soundcloud.com/raoulame/sets/golden-woman-project/s-yWzGj) but like idk what to use. I have a playlist on youtube (https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL10D0NGZ7UZ0o_2eMxfo9_zD2efhBk3BS) full of songs that were sampled and just old songs i found. So what are your favorite samples/sampled tracks? If you don't know who Moby is, he's my number one inspiration for sampling. He combines jaunty pianos with gospel and old rock sampling, and he's one of the best at it. Even if this isn't your favorite, genre, I highly recommend listening to his discography. Regardless of preference, he has probably one of the best ears in the industry for this stuff. Aside from vocals, keep your ears out for distinct hits and stabs. One of my favorite uses of this is the iconic horn sample from the Beastie Boys' "Brass Monkey" in Death Grips' "Lord of the Game" Samples should be short and should typically not exceed five to ten seconds (excluding looping). It keeps the music fresh and yours. Basically anything you think sounds cool. My all-time favorite example of a random-ass sample being thrown in literally all over an album is Lana del Rey sampling Rick James. (Sample appears at 9:20) (Sample is pretty much throughout the entire album) Good luck! I know there's a sample of a distorted scream in Radio that hasn't been identified yet afaik but it's also sampled in Afraid by the Neighborhood and I remember really searching for that scream sample for four months
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pixel
Junior Member
Posts: 94
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Post by pixel on Mar 8, 2016 4:42:14 GMT
If you don't know who Moby is, he's my number one inspiration for sampling. He combines jaunty pianos with gospel and old rock sampling, and he's one of the best at it. Even if this isn't your favorite, genre, I highly recommend listening to his discography. Regardless of preference, he has probably one of the best ears in the industry for this stuff. Aside from vocals, keep your ears out for distinct hits and stabs. One of my favorite uses of this is the iconic horn sample from the Beastie Boys' "Brass Monkey" in Death Grips' "Lord of the Game" Samples should be short and should typically not exceed five to ten seconds (excluding looping). It keeps the music fresh and yours. Basically anything you think sounds cool. My all-time favorite example of a random-ass sample being thrown in literally all over an album is Lana del Rey sampling Rick James. (Sample appears at 9:20) (Sample is pretty much throughout the entire album) Good luck! I know there's a sample of a distorted scream in Radio that hasn't been identified yet afaik but it's also sampled in Afraid by the Neighborhood and I remember really searching for that scream sample for four months I know exactly what you're talking about. It comes right after the line "not even they can stop me now," correct? Yeah, Emile Haynie is Lana del Rey's producer as well as The Neighbourhood's. It's so warped it's really difficult to tell but I'll bet it's from a really obscure place. It has the same tone as the "soul" sample so maybe you could compress and reverb the hell out of it, fade out the end of the sample and add delay? Idk that's my best guess.
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pixel
Junior Member
Posts: 94
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Post by pixel on Mar 8, 2016 4:45:09 GMT
I also just realized the video I posted for brass monkey was a bunch of college or highschool kids making a fanmade video, lmao.
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